• 1 December 1970
    • journal article
    • Vol. 7 (6), 851-63
Abstract
Rheumatoid factor-like substances were induced in rabbits by infection with Trypanosoma equiperdum. There was a certain parallelism with the phenomena described earlier with T. gambiense infections in man. The anti-IgG globulins were IgM with a preference for heterologous (human) IgG in the latex fixation test. A correlation was found between the latex fixation titres and the IgM levels in the sera. A naturally occurring pre-infectious agglutinator was not of IgM nature. The anti-IgG globulins developed in all the infected animals, mostly within 2 weeks and often before the IgG levels in the sera started to increase.